The highlighted word renders your entire argument invalid.
Really? Well thanks.
He argued pretty heavily against the evidence that was presented by others. When he did finally decide to actually... you know....
look at the evidence he came up with the exact same result as everyone else did.
I don't see that as invalid, and I think that shows that he seemingly ignored all the other research that was done on the subject.
It's not up to you or me to decide what's sufficient evidence to convince someone. It's their obligation to decide that. It'll be different for each scientist--some will jump on a theory you or I may consider too poorly supported to agree with, while others may have standards we'd consider irrationally high. And again, that's a good thing--it's part of that constant outward motion. Some move faster than others, is all.
I don't disagree here and I don't know all the steps he took to validate the evidence in a manner that finally convinced him. The only thing I do notice is that his findings line up almost point for point with the existing body of evidence. He didn't have a higher bar other than he had to run the numbers for himself.
I guess that is okay, my problem is that he choose to speak out against the evidence before he made an attempt to follow where the evidence lead him. Had he followed the evidence he wouldn't have been a denier in the first place.
I completely disagree with you. This man did EXACTLY what Alvarez did--it's just that the outcome was different. And overcoming one's biases is the hallmark of a good scientist, even if it takes a while. What's the alternative? Obviously biases must be dealt with somehow, and the only suggestion even alluded to in this thread is "Follow the majority". Which won't work, because it's another bias in and of itself.
That is exactly my point. I agree, the hallmark of a good scientist is to overcome their bias and follow the evidence. Alverez looked at the evidence and brought something new to the table. Muller didn't.
Again, had he (Muller) looked at the evidence before he spoke out against the theory I wouldn't have a problem.
The chain of events.... the theory of man made global warming was presented, evidence was gathered to back up the theory, Muller vocally and very publicly, disagreed with that evidence, more evidence was brought to light, Muller publicly disagreed with that further evidence, Muller then looked at the evidence and came to the conclusion that it was accurate. He didn't bring a lot of new evidence to the table here, at least not that I can see. He just looked at it and finally decided that it was strong enough to change his mind.
He DID examine evidence, is the thing. The fact that he came to a different conclusion than you is not proof that he didn't examine evidence; it's merely proof that he disagrees.
Yet this very same evidence NOW is enough to change his mind? Again, I don't think he brought a lot of new evidence to the table here so he either didn't understand the original evidence (which means he shouldn't be holding a very public opinion on the matter, which he did) or he didn't review the available evidence (which means he shouldn't be holding a very public opinion on the matter, again which he did).
Obviously by "science" you don't mean "a critical examination of the data available", because he did that all through this as I understand it. My only conclusion is that, despite your protestations to the contrary, "the science" to you means "the majority"--or worse, "the data I have available to me" (worse because this assumes you have the best dataset, while if you argue for following the majority there is at least the possibility of mitigating biases).
Please don't make assumptions about my intentions.
I do in fact
specifically mean "a critical examination of the data available" which he didn't do before he published his new research. He didn't bring anything new to the discussion here, he only examined the evidence that was already available and now he has "made a 180 degree turn" on the subject.
He made this seemingly remarkable change after he reviewed the evidence and came up with the exact same results as the rest of the body science.
Again, it's not the conclusions that I'm interested in, but the process. I'd much rather be wrong for the right reasons than right for the wrong ones, because at least if I'm wrong for the right reasons I can correct myself.
That is noble and I completely agree with this thought process. That however is not the case with Muller. He was only interested in his bias, he was very obviously NOT following the scientific process. The evidence for my statement rests in the fact that, when he DID finally follow the
already available evidence he
then changed his mind.
If you are as interested in the process as you appear to be then you will see why I have problems with the guy.